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Genocide
"صرخة فلسطيني من مشروع بيت لاهيا في شمال غزة المحاصر، وهو يقف فوق ركام منزل عائلة أبو النصر، الذي قصفه الاحتلال الإسرائيلي فوق رؤوس ساكنيه، مما أدى إلى استشهاد أكثر من 100 شخص، منهم على الأقل 25 طفلًا. A scream from a Palestinian in the Beit Lahiya project in besieged northern Gaza, standing on the rubble of the Abu Nasr family’s home, which was bombed by the Israeli occupation above the heads of its residents, resulting in the martyrdom of more than 100 people, including at least 25 children." - Source
Early morning (3 am), residents of the Abu Nasr family house sent out appeals for rescue after the five-storey house in the Beit Lahia project was bombed by Israeli forces. 93 people were killed. Dr. Abu Safiya, director of Kamal Adwan hospital stated that the hospital received 70 martyrs and 80 injured from the Abu Nasr family massacre.
Locals retrieved the bodies of 117 people, whereas another 137 remain under the rubble, most likely passed away.
The family had offered shelter from the Israeli onslaught to displaced people, as many had moved from Jabalia to Beit Lahia. There were about 300 people in the house when it was bombed
The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor reported that the house sheltered about 200 people and collected testimonies from survivors and claims that an American MK-84 bomb weighing 908 kilograms was used. The information is yet to be verified by weapons experts, noting that no fragments of the bomb were found on the scene yet.
One of the very few survivors, Muhammad Nabil Issa Baraka Abu Nasr, insisted in a testimony that the house was not struck with a bomb, but rather with barrel bombs. He added that they found family members were flung all across neigborhood buildings from the sheer force of the explosion.
Another survivor stated to EuroMed HR Monitor that his wife and four children were among the dead. He himself was flung dozens of meters away by the force of the blast, injuring him all over his body. He was only rescued by locals who took him to Kamal Adwan Hospital, where he has been awaiting transfer to Al-Awda Hospital for surgery.
Eman Mustafa, a member of the family who lost her uncle Alaa Asfoura and her cousins shared an update. Amid Civil Defense effort to identify as many of the dead interred in mass fraves, the crews retrieved some of the corpses of the family members from the Beit Lahia market, which was turned into a cemetery during the North Gaza siege.
Eman emphasized that the bodies of a large number of family members is still presumably buried under the rubble.
Names of the martyrs (buried and some still under rubble):
"List of Abu Nasr Family Martyrs"
"*Those who died were saved, and those who were saved have died."
Asfoura family
Analysis showing victims being retrieved from 4 different building/homes
Sources: Mahmoud Awadia, Quds Net, AFP, Reuters
The details for each video come from social media. None of it has been verified.